Creating Customer Value Case
Economic value
When a product provides tangible monetary savings either at the time of purchase or over its long-term use. For example, an energy-efficient lightbulb or fuel-efficient car reduces the consumer's cost of owning these products.
Market-driven process
a firm uncovers the needs of its customers through market research
Feature fatigue
a recent study found that as more features are added to a product, its perceived capability to consumers increases, but its perceived usability decreases. Before they use a product, consumers say that capability matters more, but usability becomes far more important after they get a chance to actually use the product.
organizations can create experiential value in at least four ways
branding, design, customer experience, and customer service.
Customer service and customer experience
can be a source of significant competitive advantage to organizations.
Service-profit chain
demonstrated the link among employee satisfaction, customer satisfaction, customer loyalty, and customer profitability.
Experiential value
intangible psychological and emotional value that can be derived from brands or great service
Front-line employees
often receive the least compensation and the least amount of training in organizations. They are the most responsible for delivering superior customer experience.
Lack of training
results in an annual turnover rate of over 100%
Market-driving process
the company creates new products based on it own vision of the future.
Life cycle cost
the cost of owning the product over its entire useful life.
Economic value to the customer (EVC)
the maximum price that a customer is willing to pay for a product
EVC
the total life cycle cost or cost of ownership over the entire life of a product.
Network effect
the value of a product or service for a customer increases significantly as more and more customers adopt it.
increasing return to scale
when a firm increases its resources by a certain proportion and output increases by a greater proportion.
Brands
Brands signal quality, status, and image and therefore represent immense psychological value to consumers.
Four ways customers derive value from a product or service
Economic value, functional value, experiential value, and social value